r WC eather Jr Continued Cold 5k iati tlIaitt Editorial I When A Wolf Shears The Sheep ,.. / VOL. LII. No. 49 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FYCENTS Congressmen, FDR Demand Speedy Action On Labor Bill Bi-Partisan Group Plans 'Cooling-Off' Period, Arbi ration Measures Curbs Would Last Ony For Duration WASHINGTON, Nov. 24-()-A bi-partisan group of Congressmen meeting with President Roosevelt and labor and justice department exec- tives reached a consensus tonight that labor legislation should be taken up promptly, that it should provide for a cooling off period before strikes, and that the Chief Executive should bave the power to inaugurate com- pulsory arbitration' if necessary. Those points were enunciated by House niajority leader McCormack (Dem.-Mass.), who talked with re- porters in the White House lobby after the two and a quarter hout conference. Emer ency Move The proposed legislation would ap- ply only to strikes against defense in- dustry and Qnly for the period of the emergency. House minority leader Martin (Rep.Mass.) stood by McCormack's side, agreeing that there had been a consensus but remarking that no commitments had been made. "It was pretty generally agreed," McCormack said, "that labor legis- lation would be taken up by the House after th price control bill." Watlg Period, Needed Likewise, the Democratic leader as- serted, it was the general view that there should be "a period of reason or a period of sanity, a waiting period' called for by law." Furthermore, he added, it was agreed that "the President should have the power, in the final analysis to order arbitration. As McCormack viewed the opera- tion of the prospective measure, there would be first a cooling off period, a period of negotiation or mediation, and then, if need be, arbitration. No Details Discussed! Asked whether the so-called ,cool- ing off period would be for thirty days, as some legislators have sug- gested, McCormack said that the length of the period and other details had not been discussed. He intimated that there had alsoE been some talk of holding secret bal- lots' before strikes could be called. Stump Speakers Will HoldMeeting Inaugurating a new subject for dis- cussion by new members, Sigma RhoR Tau, engineering stump speakers' society, will hold its regular weekly meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union.I Faculty speaker for the evening will be Prof. D. E. Hobart of the Depart-I ment of Engineering Drawing andI Mechanism, who will address the group on the subject "Tool and Die Design."+ Having formerly discussed the ad- vantages and disadvantages of rear- engine automobiles, freshman speak- ing groups will today take up discus- sion of the subject, "Battleships vs. Airplanes in Modern Warefare." British Report Capture, Of Important Axis Base Gambut Taken By Right Flank In Showdown Battle As Left Races To Cut Off Northern Libya U.S. Troops Enter Dutch Guiana To Protect Vital Bauxite Source; French Col onies May Be Seized (By The Associated Press)' CAIRO, Egypt, Nov. 24-The Brit- ish right was locked in a decisive bat- tle tonight with Axis forces in a 1,600 square-mile area, claiming the cap- ture of the important Axis supply center of Gambut in the course of that terrible struggle, while far to the south the Imperial left was racing westward in a vast are apparently intended to cut off all northern Libya. The latter column, loosed originally from Giarabub, was acknowledged by the Axis to have driven forward some 200 miles, capturing an Italian garri- son north of Gialo Oasis, and appear- ed to be meeting little opposition in -a grand maneuver of encirclement headed for the Gulf of Sirte to cut the coa'stal route of existence to west- ern Libya. 0 The master plan, it appeared, was to draw a line of men and steel across the southern end of the entire Libyan hump and thus to leave the eastern Axis forces of the German general Erwin Rommel-which. already were declared to be cut into four or more sections-with no prospect of rein- forcement or supplies save through highly hazardous air and sea trans- port. But while this thrust was moving at a great rate through the silent wastes of the south, the British right was involved in such a showdown as desert warfare had never before seen. Gambut, about half way to the British garrison of Tobruk on the Mediterranean shore, was stormed and overrun by New Zealanders, the British command announced, in a continuation of the coastal drive that already had wrested Bardia from the Germans and Italians. From Gambut all the way westward to the viinity of Rezegh, 10 miles German Pact Pledges War On Comintern BERLIN, Nov. 24.-R)--Seven more governments ,either active Axis allies or occupied by Axis troops, tomorrow will join the six-power anti-comin- tern pact aimed against "all destruc- tive powers which directly'or indirect-' ly support Bolshevism." This phrase was taken by observ- ers as a reference to the United States and Britain because of their support of the Soviet armies fighting an Axis invasion. Berlin considers these na- tions active sponsors of "world Bol- shevism" because of that support. Authorized Germans said the new signers are to be Finland, Croatia, Rumania and Slovakia, who have contributed manpower in the battle against Russia; occupied Denmark and Bulgaria, and the Japanese-spon- sored Nanking regime in China. The six nations who will renew their signatures are Germany, Japan, Italy, Spain, Hungary and Manchu- kuo, which was created by a Japanese invasion of Manuchuria. The observance was described as "a demonstration of defensive will to oppose all destructive powers which directly or indirectly support Bol- shevism" and "an alliance which will create the pre-conditions for a new order in Europe and for the applica- tion of principles of a new order in the entire world." below Tobruk, the foiward British columns were gambling with every weapon at hand to break Rommel's back and smash the pride of his army-the heavy mechanized forces. Both sides were losing heavily in this battlefield of great decision and as tank strength declined British in- fantrymen-Englishmen, South Afri- cans, New' Zealanders-armed with Bren guns charged the Axis positions. "There is an amazing battle, going on in an area 40 by 40 miles," the British military spokesman summed~ up, "and there are no regular lines and no telephone communications." "This battle," said the British com- mand itself, "which has been fought and is being fought with the utmost resolution by both sides, has been in progress without cessation for over 48 hours." German Units Claim Advance Near Moscow Tanks, Artillery Capture City 31 Miles Outside Russians'_Ex-Capital BERLIN, Nov. 24-(P)-German tank and artillery units were reported officially tonight only 31 miles. north-1 west of the coveted prize of Moscow after capturing Solnetschnogorsk.. The High Command said the cap- ture of the city, which does not ap- pear on most maps, occurred "after embittered fighting," and war dis- patches said 1,400 Russians defending 14 three - story - deep underground casemates were wiped out by German artillery and shock troops. Solnetschnogorski apparently is on the Kalinin-Moscow railroad, hence the Germans claimed their troops had gone two-thirds of the way to Moscow from the bitter fighting area of Kal- inin. German airmen ranged ahead to bomb and disrupt rail traffic or com- munication lines' radiating from the capital itself, the communique said.1 West of Moscow along the Rssian arc of defenses, German dispatches said nine other casemates of unusual strength had been overcome. Nazi artillery silenced the concr te and steel casemates, these accounts said, to permit engineers armed with dynamite to approach and complete the destruction. Other heavy artillery batteries 'con- tinued to poundtbesieged Leningrad in the northwest, the communique said. Nothing was said of operations in the southern Donets basin area, but in the Crimea the Germans admitted the Russians still were holding out at Savastopol, the big southwestern Red naval base. Cohen To Talk In New Series On Skepuctsm Prof. Morris Raphael Cohen-called the modern Socrates with the acid tongue-will present his view of the subject, "The Failure of Skepticism," at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. The lecture will be the first in a series of three sponsored by Hillel Foundation, Newman Club and the Inter-Guild. The three speakers will attack the question of skepticism from the viewpoint of different faiths and varied training. Professor Cohen will be followed by the Reverend Martin Cyril D'Arcy, lecturer in Thomistic philosophy at the University of Oxford, and Dr. Gregory Vlastos, professor of phil- osophy at Queen's University in Can- ada on Dec. 5 and Jan 18 respectiyely. Born in Russia, Professor Cohen roomed with Hon. Felix Frankfurter, Supreme Court Justice, when both were attending Harvard. Now pro- fessor of philosophy at the University of Chicago, he formerly taught for 35 years at the City College of New York. U.S. Consulate Explosion Strains Far East Policy WASHINGTON, Nov. 24-(AP)-A Quiz Kids Defeat Professors After Hectic Battle Of Brains ti Forty-nine year old Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department .and nine year old Gerard Darrow of the Quiz Kids showed an Oratorical audience last night that even book worms can glow in the dark. With These personalities generally directing traffic around masses of intellectual stumps planted by referee Prof. John L. Brumm of the journal- ism department, it was a nip and tuck battle all the way, but the Quiz Kids won, 440 points to 390. x Defeat lost much o its sting, how- ever, when fond memories of the sound trouncing given the University of Chicago faculty were revived. Whatever sting was lost in this way, Professor Brumm compensated for with sharp darts at his colleagues. Professor Brumm's humor, the pi- ano playing of 14-year-old Joan Bish- op, the hordes of facts of undeter- mined significance, suspense, ignor- ance, wit and wisdom all combined to provide a "good time" evening for nearly 5,000 Ann Arborites. Richard Williams, 11 years old, provided the biggest single sensation of the evening. He solved a mathe- matical monstrosity in short order, deftly employing formulae of college level to their fullest advantage. He also spelled aloud correctly the name of the temporary Russian capital, Kuibyshev. Prof. Charles M. Davis of the geo- graphy department, to the amaze- ment of all, slipped on a catch ques- tion to give the impression that he didn't know cows could not speak. Jack Lucal, 14 years old, said Pres- ident John Adams' wife was the First Lady to hang washing in the East Room of the White House. Harve Fischman, 11 years Qld, said Millard Fillmore was the first President to install a bathtub in the White House. (Facts of undetermined significance.) On the faculty side, Profs. Robert C. Angell of the sociology department, Harold M. Dorr of the political sci- ence department, Slosson and poet Wystan H. Auden of the English de- partment possibly set a bad precedent Lirary Adds To Americana Buys Senate Rule Book Owned By Jefferson The first book to be published on parliamentary procedure has been added to the fast-growing collection of Americana in the William L. Clem- ents Library.- Written by Thomas Jefferson, the wo'rk is entitled "A Manual of Parlia- mentary Practice for Use in the Sen- ate of the United States." The copy in Ann Arbor is of unusual value be- chuse it was originally in the library of its author, Randolph G. Adams, di- rectoi of the Clements LibrarV, an- nounced yesterday. Still used by the Senate, the "Man- ual," was the first book printed in Washington after the transfer of gov- ernmental offices from New York in 1801. The volume purchased remained the personal property of Jefferson when he sold most of his library to the United States to become the nu- cleus of the present Library of Con- gress. Upon his death in 1826, the book was sold by the executors of his estate. Since that time thevolume changed hands from one rare book collector to another until it was obtained by Louis J. Kolb, noted bibliophile, from whose collection it was purchased. An inscription in Jefferson's own handwriting can be seen in the book. Christmas Seal Drive Seeks 10,000 Patrons The annual Christmas seal sale of the Washtenaw County branch of the Michigan Tuberculosis Association will get under way today when' 10,000 envelopes, each containing 200 Christmas seals, will be mailed to Ann Arhn and.AVrnilar, ti vrcii~,rtg for their students, particularly the latter two. Given the quotation, "The barber- shop is the last refuge of masculinity," Professor Slosson did not know it was taken from one of his own books. Auden was trapped similarly with lines from some poems of his own composition. Quiz Kids -'Just Kids' By BARBARA deFRIES- and BEA BOUCHARD All just kids, all talking at once and when they were packed in one small Union room, pandemonium really broke loose.-The Quiz Kids were in town. Armed with a dictionary in one hand an an encyclopedia in the oth- er, we entered the realms of the in- tellects and were quite unpreparedr for what followed. They were all perfectly human kids who loved to laugh and eat candy. Richard Williams age 11, a blonde headed, fair skinned boy in knickers, was perhaps the shyest of them all. Dubbed the mathematical quiz kid,, Richard lives in East! Chicago where' he is in the 7th grade. He is far su- perior to the others in his class in mathematics and in six weeks he completed an ordinary year's course. Dick could read perfectly at the age of three and when in kinder- (Continued on Page 5) ASME Meets, T Hear Smith 'The Future Of Power' To Be Topic Of Talk Three hundred engineers repre- senting University organizations and members of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers from Flint, To- ledo, Jackson and Detroit will assem- ble in the Rackham Amphitfieatre at, 8 p.m. today to hear A. R. Smith speak on "The Future of Power Gen- eration." The Detroit section of ASME is sponsoring the speech by Mr. Smith who is managing engineer of the Tur- bine Division of General Electric in{ Schenectady, N. Y.{ Preceeding themeeting ASME ex- ecutive councils of the University branch and the Detroit section will honor Mr. Smith with a dinner in; the Union at 6 p.m. Other guests will include members of the faculty of the College of Engineering. Mr. Smith has installed steam- electric turbines in Europe and South' America, apd has been connected with General Electric since 1897. Moving pictures of the uses of coal: in power development will be, shown at 7 p.m. 'Roaring Forties' To Clash American Move Is Intended To Prevent Nazi Sabotage Of Valuable Aluminum Ore; Brazil, Netherlands To Cooperate WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.-(R)-The United States today announced the despatch of American troops to Dutch Guiana to guard vital bauxite mines against the Axis, and Senator Connally (Dem.-Tex.) predicted that this country may soon take over French Guiana and the French island of Martinique. "I approve the action of the President in taking steps to protect the security of our basic war materials," said the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. "I think we shall have to take over Martin- ique (in the Caribbean) and French Guiana if Vichy continues to succumb to Nazi influence." Dutch Guiana, which is on the northeast coast of South America, lies next door to French Guiana. The Nazis, according to reports in diplomatic circles, Chave been active in the latter colony, U-Boat Sink Near Canada By Corvettes Two Submarines Sighted Off Newfoundland Coast. Nov. 5, Says Navy Head OTTAWA, Nov. 24-VP)-A German U-boat was sunk recently in the North Atlantic by two Canadian cor- vettes, the Navy Minsitry announced tonight. The sinking was credited to the corvettes Chambly and Moosejaw- These small, auxiliary vessels are de- signed chiefly for operations close to shore but some are cq pable of wide range. The announcement, issued by Navy Minister Angus MacDonald, did not say where the U-boat was sunk. On Nov. 5 MacDonald said German submarines were operating off the coast of Newfoundland, within sight of the shore. At that time he said two U-boats had been attacked-one by a corvette and the other by a plane-in October off the northern tip of Newfoundland! and that one possibly was sunk. * MacDonald said these submarines were discovered at the point where Belle Isle Strait, the northern mouth ,of the St. Lawrence River, empties into the Atlantic. This is about 400 miles from the site of the United States navy base on the south coast of Newfoundland. Capt. Davidson Will Speak On Army-Navy Operations Capt. Lyal A. Davidson, U.S.N., pro- fessor of Naval Science and Tactics and Commandant of the University's NROTC unit, will speak on "The Naval District and Joint Operations with the Army" at 7:15 p.m. today in Room 348, West Engineering Build- ing. Captain Davidson delivered the in- itial lecture of the series of talks on naval subjects sponsored this semes- ter by the 'department ofNaval Sci- ence and Tactics. : and it was believed'the United States was sending troops to Dutch Guiana as a precaution aginst any coup which might lead to sabotage of the mines. Bauxite is an ore which enters in- to the production of aluminum. A White House announcement said the colony of Surinam (another name for Dutch Guiana) furnishes more than 60 per cent of the requirements of this country's aluminum indus ry and that the ore was vital as well to "all nations resisting aggression." Cooperation Is Seen. The decision to send troops was taken, it was stressed, with the co- operation of both the Netherlands, mother country of the colony, and of Brazil, which borders it on the south. "This contingent will, of course, be withdrawn as soon as the present danger to the mines is removed and at the latest upon the conclusion of hositilities," the White House said. The danger was not specified, but authoritative sources said it was from sabotage rather than invasion. Only relatively weak colonial forces have been available to assure a protection of the mines since the Nazi invasion of the Netherlands. About the size of New Jersey and Pennsylvania, the colony has a total population of 175.000. * Other Colonies May B Taken In London, the Netherlands Gov- ernment hinted the United State4 might take over other Dutch posses- sions in the Western Hemisphere- the Curacao )slands off the north coast of Venezuela. Both the White House and War De- partment were.silent on the size and other details of the Army contingent sent to Surinam, but it was ,under- stood the troops were detached frost the garrison at Trinidad, in the Car- ibbean, one of the eight bases ac- quired last year from Great Britain. They were reported en route to Paramaribo, chief port of the Dutch colony. Brazilian Military Mission En Route To'Dutch Guiana RIO DE JANEIRO, Nov. 24-(IP)- The Brazilian government announced tonight it was sending a military mis- sion to Dutch Guiana to cooperate with Netherlands and United States troops in guarding the valuab* baux- ite mines there. The government said It also would take "special measures of military vigilante" on its side of the Dutch colonial frontier as a means of im- plementing a policy of whole-hearted hemisphere defense solidarity. Informed sources here said a U. S. army force of approximately 2,000 Intervention Need Disputed ! Ann Arbor Community Forun HearsForeign Policy Debated Freshmen To Organize Today For Sports Building Mayhem, l~? a' a Interventionists vied with isola- tionists in a spirited discussion of the question "What should be the foreign policy of the United States in the present world crisis?" at the Ann Arbor Community Forum yesterday. Speaking for' the cause of all-out aid to the embattled democracies, Dr. William A. Frayer, former member of the University history department, declared that our foreign policy should be so shaped as to "insure the complete defeat of Hitler." Danger Of Germany "Germany is a real and great dan- ger to us," he said, "because it thor- oughly believes in the idea of the master race. Without punishing Germany at a peace conference, we should take all measures necessary cause the allies took the side of Russia, invader of Finland, a terri- tory grabber in Germany's class. No War For Empire He concluded by saying that we should not go to war to maintain the British Empire, for we ourselves had to fight a war to gain independence of that Empire. Following the speeches Frayer and Wiltse joined William Muehl, '44L, Prof. James H. Cissel, of the 'engin- eering school, and Eugene Power, head of a local manufacturing con- cern, to discuss the question inform- ally among themselves and with the audience. Power stated that if the Nazis win the United States would be ringed That time of the year has come when every upperclassman carries his ident card, when soph is soph and frosh is frosh, and when no one need fear they will never meet. Those proclamations so liberally spread around campus yesterday are not mere laughing matters, as those who are about to die in the frosh- soph games at the Sports Building Saturday well know. Freshmen Open Fire The first overt act will be commit- ted at 7:30 pm. today in the Natural Science Auditorium by the ever-ram- bunctious freshmen, always spoiling for a chance to show their power to those who would oppose them. They will elect 12 captains who will be privileged not only to organize the slaughter, but to get an extra whack at those snooty sophomores. The sophomores, on the other hand, |figure that weaklings of frosh need a day more to get prepared, and so .:rill moat o fl 79(1 n m nwmm rnw in the rumor is that retreat means men-wnicn may already nave landed death, but facing the onslaught means in Guiana-would represent virtually murder.', all branches of the service except On the land, on the sea, 'and cavalry. through the air the combatants will styain every resource at their com- m'and to lick the living daylights out Harmon, W es&,a. of each other. A mass water polo game in which every man is a sub- marine, and every man's head the For Football Stars ball, will probably replace Trafalgar and Jutland as the major naval battle of history. Tommy Harmon, Bob Westfall and Served By RIiskey # his Varsity teammates will rub el- Earl Riskey, the referee, and his bows with high school football play- staff have provided enough events to ers from all over Washtenaw County keep the more belligerent spirits hap- at the Union Ballroom today. py for the rest of time. A mass tug- The occasion is the annual foot- of-war, a giant volley-ball game, ball banquet scheduled to get under and a strange, but oh-too-welcome way at 6 p.m. with 800 expected, to game called Chinese graveyard should attend. send anyone but Superman home a From behind locke doors-they'll tired, well-exercised individual. Sat- only be closed from 6 to 6:30 p.m. for urday night dates need not fear miss- privacy-the dinner guests will watch ing swains, however, as the swim- Tommy Harmon give his regular r I